The silent atmosphere enveloped the room, and the water ripples on the teacup reflected Victor's heavy breathing. Copperpot chanically drank from the water cup, not caring if the recently boiled water was too hot.
"When she was a ntal patient, she could harm you without restraint because she didn't know who you were, nor did she know who she was."
"But when she turns back into a mother, no mother can accept everything she has done."
"Perhaps she always wanted to leave." Copperpot's tone beca numb. "When she had episodes, she would throw anything she could pick up at , telling to leave quickly."
"But I can't leave, I can't leave her." Copperpot's voice began to tremble again. "No matter what, I can't leave her. She's my mother."
Victor closed his eyes, and a heavy exhalation ca from between his lips and nose. Schiller also let out a sigh and said, "I advised you before when I prescribed the dication, suggesting that you move to a new apartnt, a change of environnt would be beneficial for the patient to start a new phase of treatnt and recovery."
Copperpot shook his head, tears shimring in the dim light as he moved. He said, "She doesn't want to leave."
"Why?"
Copperpot tightly gripped the water cup, and the veins protruded from the back of his hand.
"Because of my father."
"According to my mother, she t my father on this street. He brought her here to et his family. They had dinner together, drank sweet wine, and chatted by the fireplace..."
"My uncle sang, and everyone laughed and encouraged them to dance..."
Accompanied by a slightly hoarse voice, the fire in the fireplace rose, and shadows gathered around the sofa cheerfully. So brought wine, others brought fruit trays. When a folk ballad started to play, everyone clapped their hands.
A young couple walked to the center of the room and started dancing, their clothes swirling. When the song ended, they held hands, accepting praise and blessings from their family, then walked hand in hand into the church.
Until one of the hands touched the na on the tombstone, in the cold rainy night, only a madwoman remained spinning in this dark and decaying old mansion, with only the sound of rain singing for her.
"After my father died, my mother blad everything on him for not bringing an umbrella on that rainy night. So she often turned everything upside down in the house, trying to find an umbrella."
"But if I actually gave her an umbrella, she would scream and curse, smashing it with a chair. She said there was a curse on it, and she said we were all cursed..."
"I can't rember how long it has been like this..."
"At the beginning, she would hold all night, tirelessly telling stories of their past. Then, she would silently sit in the corner of the living room every night, rummaging through the cabinet that had been searched countless tis..."
"Every ti I tried to stop her, she would attack . And later, whenever I returned to this house, she would make leave..."
"When she started to gradually regain her sanity, I was happy. I thought these days would be over, but I didn't expect..."
Copperpot covered his face with both hands, his shoulders trembling uncontrollably. The sobbing, which had lost its voice, sounded more like the hooting of an owl, strangely bringing a desire to laugh in such a heavy atmosphere.
And so, dawn arrived, and a sharper ringtone echoed, Schiller picked up the mobile phone and said, "Really? She's awake?... Alright, we'll be
there right away..."
As they walked out of Copperpot's old mansion, the sun was rising from the horizon. The night's rain filled the air with a thick moisture, which felt even cooler as the morning breeze blew. When it entered the lungs, it was as if swallowing many ice cubes.
As the car headed towards the hospital, when the three of them got out of the car, Gordon had already co out, looking sowhat helpless. He said, "You better go in quickly, she's causing quite a scene."
After going upstairs, even before entering the hospital room, they saw a nurse standing outside the room, holding an IV bottle in one hand and a tubing with a bloody needle in the other. Another older nurse was about to enter. Victor held them back and asked, "What's going on?"
The young nurse sighed and said, "When the lady woke up, she pulled out all the IV needles in her hand and bled a lot. She even used the IV stand to attack people. We dare not go near her."
The old nurse peeked inside and said, "We need to subdue her quickly. She's still bleeding from her hand, and if the wound bursts open again, it will be even more difficult to handle."
At that mont, footsteps could be heard coming from the nearby staircase. Brand, accompanied by a group of nurses, waved his hand and said, "Administer a sedative."
Inside the room, Mrs. Copperpot seed crazed. She would roar and attempt to attack anyone who ca close.
Fortunately, being an elderly woman and having lost a lot of blood, she didn't have much strength. She was soon subdued, and as the sedative took effect, she quieted down and lay on the bed, staring blankly at the ceiling.
Copperpot walked in front, with Victor and Schiller following behind. When Copperpot approached his mother's bed, Mrs. Copperpot shifted her gaze and looked at her son with a mix of guilt and pleading.
"Why are you stopping , Al..." a hoarse voice ca from her throat, but Copperpot trembled and couldn't answer.
"I don't want to stay here anymore... I can't do it anymore. Don't stop ..." Mrs. Copperpot started trembling all over, but she couldn't move, only remaining stiff in her place.
Schiller suddenly pushed Copperpot and whispered, "Show your arm to your mother."
Copperpot turned around in confusion, and Victor also looked at Schiller, but under Schiller's gaze, Copperpot extended his arm and rolled up his sleeve.
His arm was thin and bony, with rough skin, and its unnaturally pale complexion showed no signs of any wounds.
Schiller stood by the bedside and said to Mrs. Copperpot, "Madam, you suffer from paranoid schizophrenia. You've been imagining that you attacked your son during your episodes, but we've treated you with dication, and now you're awake."
Mrs. Copperpot paused, and with eagle-like claws, she grabbed her son's wrist, then made an effort to turn herself over and used her other hand to touch Copperpot's arm.
Indeed, it was smooth, without any scars. The lizard serum and restorative dicine created by Connors weren't just for treating external injuries; they could even completely heal scars.
Copperpot felt his mother's arm trembling, and he heard her whimpering cries. He couldn't tell if it was out of guilt or relief.
"Mom didn't want to do those things, and I didn't want to do them either..."
"You didn't do them." Schiller's tone was so confident, as if he wasn't lying at all. Even Victor rubbed his eyes, doubting if what he had seen before, the heavily injured Copperpot, was just an illusion.
"Yes..." Copperpot held his mother's hand and said, "It was all just imagination because you didn't take your dication on ti, Mom. As long as you receive treatnt and take your dication in the hospital, nothing like this will happen again..."
Mrs. Copperpot was now gasping for breath due to her crying. Brand sighed outside the door and said, "You should leave here for now. The patient needs rest."
Mrs. Copperpot clung tightly to her son's hand, and Copperpot couldn't leave. Only Schiller and Victor remained by the door of the hospital room.
The morning sunlight stread through the window, turning the door fra into a picture fra. Schiller and Victor stood against a golden backdrop.
Victor pressed his fingertips to his lips, and Schiller noticed his trembling fingers. The emotions he had bottled up all night were now erupting, and this usually gentle and composed professor seed on the verge of breaking down.
His gaze even started to lose focus, as if troubled by many terrifying illusions.
"If Nora dies..." Victor's voice rang out, like a bowstring snapping on a broken violin. He looked at Schiller with a pleading expression and asked, "Will I go mad like this too?"
Schiller couldn't give that answer because he was facing a living, breathing person in front of him, his patient, and not a character from a comic or a movie.
The familiarity with the plot and the foresight of prophecy brought no sense of superiority that a ti traveler should enjoy, only a heavier sense of sorrow.
In this world, each person has their own tragedy, and there is no single answer that can be the sole solution to tragedy, thus there is no savior.
In Gotham City, so people play tragedy, so play cody. So laugh at tragedy, and so cry at cody. So people laugh and cry at the sa ti, while others cry and laugh.
No one can make everyone cry, and no one can make everyone laugh, not even the ti traveler or the prophet.
This is Gotham, a City that cannot be saved.
The golden backdrop in the picture fra is about to overflow. Suddenly, Victor trembled and turned around. He quickly walked back to the hospital room, staring directly at Copperpot and said, "Co with , Copperpot... Co with !"
He pulled Copperpot along, making him stand up from the hospital bed, and they walked out of the hospital. The morning light swallowed their figures, and at so point, Schiller, who stood by the door, also disappeared.
When they returned to the laboratory, Victor swiftly took off his coat, damp with moisture, and threw it aside. He caressed Copperpot's back, pushing him forward, then walked to the lab table. He turned around, facing Copperpot.
Victor seed to have lost his usual elegance and gentleness. His face appeared sowhat neurotic and even a little mad under the cold light of the laboratory.
"Copperpot..."
Victor looked into Copperpot's eyes, where there was warmth and longing that Copperpot couldn't understand, as well as an incomprehensible obsession typical of ordinary people.
It wasn't like a teacher looking at a student; it was more like a father looking at his son or, perhaps, like soone who had been saved from tragedy looking at another tragedy—a traveler gazing at another traveler on an endless snowy plain.
At this mont, Copperpot heard Victor ask him, "Copperpot... Do you know how water turns into ice?"
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